Tag Archives: oceania

Riot police called to Sydney football match brawl

Two people are believed to have been stabbed in a fight that erupted after a football match in Sydney.

Riot squad police were called to a field on West Botany Street, Rockdale, just after 5pm on Sunday after reports of a brawl involving "spectators, armed with weapons", police said.

Two men were found with lacerations to their limbs.

They were taken to St George Hospital.

A third man was "trampled in the melee" and suffered minor injuries.

A crime scene has been established at the field and police said they were continuing to try to identify the people involved.

NSW Police have released an image of a man they want to speak to. He is described as being of Caucasian appearance and stocky build and was last seen wearing a black jumper, black shorts, black bucket hat and dark sunglasses.

The brawl appears to have taken place after the match between Rockdale Ilinden and Sydney United 58 in the National Premier Leagues NSW Men competition.

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Footage filmed from the sideline appears to show players earlier involved in a heated clash as people in the crowd shout and heckle.

"Kill the (expletive)," one person shouts twice as people — who appear to be from the stands — jump onto the field.

Other footage appears to show flares being let off in a car park beside the field as people continue to clash.

Any witnesses or anyone with information is urged to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

Victoria records no new COVID-19 cases

More than 10,000 Victorians with links to Western Australia's coronavirus outbreak have been told to isolate, as neither state recorded new COVID-19 cases today.

Victoria declared the Perth and Peel areas red zones, meaning anyone from those areas must be tested and isolate for 14 days.

The harsh measures come after a Victorian man visiting Perth tested positive to coronavirus last week.

READ MORE: Europe reopens but virus patients are still overwhelming ICU teams

Of the 265 passengers and crew that flew with the infected Burwood man on Wednesday's Qantas Flight QF778 from Perth, 214 are still in Victoria with 135 of those testing negative.

So far 42 people have landed in Victoria after visiting exposure sites in Perth, all of whom are currently isolating; 32 have tested negative.

READ MORE: Coronavirus fragments detected in third NSW sewage plant

The Perth and Peel areas entered a snap lockdown set to lift from Tuesday.

WA Premier Mark McGowan said if it was not safe to open up, restrictions would remain in place.

"We just have to be cautious," he said.

"We're not going to make a move which will elevate the risk to the Western Australia public, our number one priority is to keep West Australians safe.

"So we won't be opening up if we think there's any potential for further outbreak."

READ MORE: With OK from experts, some US states resume use of Johnson & Johnson vaccine

https://twitter.com/VicGovDH/status/1386090819782942721?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

From Thursday, Perth will cut its returned traveller cap to 512 per week. 

Over the past 24 hours almost 12,000 people were tested for coronavirus in WA.

In Victoria, 1464 vaccine doses were administered and 13,941 test results were received.

WA records no new COVID-19 cases

The spread of COVID-19 between two diners at a Perth restaurant has prompted a mandatory 14-day self-isolation for anyone who visited the venue and six other high-risk exposure sites across the city.

Western Australia on Sunday recorded no new locally transmitted cases of the virus, with one new case in hotel quarantine.

However, Premier Mark McGowan said a man in his 40s was a confirmed case late on Saturday, the first day of the snap three-day lockdown of the Perth and Peel regions.

READ MORE: Disbelief that Perth's patient zero was allowed to attend Indian wedding

"Late yesterday afternoon, Western Australia Health advised the public that one new COVID-19 case had been recorded in the community," Mr McGowan said.

"That result came after my media conference yesterday and obviously very concerning. The man in his 40s became unwell on Friday April 23 and presented for a COVID-19 test."

The man — dubbed case 986 — is a finance worker from Landsdale who visited the Landsdale Early Learning and Enrichment Childcare on April 20, 21 and 22 which is also listed as an exposure site.

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WA Health authorities have installed a pop-up testing clinic over fears the man was infectious for three days.

Health Minister Roger Cook said he expected around 200 people — around 70 families and staff from the childcare centre — to be tested at the clinic.

Paediatric nurses have been called up to Landsdale to assist with the testing.

Case 986 caught the virus from the Kitchen Inn restaurant in Kardinya when he was sitting at a separate table to the COVID positive Victorian man and his friend.

The Victorian man caught the virus from Perth's patient zero who was a returned traveller granted an exemption to fly to India for a wedding, which is currently suffering one of the world's worst surges of the virus of the entire pandemic.

He returned to Perth and stayed in hotel isolation in the city's Mercure Hotel, the same hotel where case 986 stayed in hotel quarantine.

"If you want to go overseas, it should be for only the most extraordinary of reasons at this point in time," Mr McGowan said.

"Not to go overseas for a wedding. Even to go overseas for a funeral. So we have to be a lot tougher in relation to letting people out of Australia at this point in time."

The Kitchen Inn is now listed as an exposure site. Those previously considered a casual contact, are now considered close contacts.

The spread of the virus is concerning enough it is prompting new rules – anyone who has been at one of the seven high risk exposure sites must isolate for 14 days regardless of their test result.

"It certainly elevated our concerns and that's the reason why we have now said people who were at those restaurants, that previously would have been considered a casual contact, have now been considered close contacts," Mr Cook said today.

WA health authorities have now identified a total of 359 close and casual contacts of the confirmed cases. So far on 85 of those have tested negative.

Among the new high-risk sites:

  • Thai Thyme Restaurant at shopping centre Lakeside Joondalup on Thursday between 6.45pm and 8pm.
  • Kung Fu Kitchen in Morley on Wednesday between 5pm and 7pm.

Low-risk sites:

  • Target at Lakeside Joondalup between 8pm and 8.30pm
  • Coles and Kmart at Galleria on Wednesday between 5pm and 7pm
  • Dynamic Music in Wangara on Thursday between 5pm and 6.30pm
  • Puma service station in Alexander Heights on Friday between 5.15pm and 5.45pm
  • Jumbo BBQ Roast Duck House in Bentley on Tuesday between 12pm and 12.30pm

Concerned residents and those who worked in the area were among scores of people who queued up for a COVID test, some waiting four hours.

Almost 12,000 people have been tested in 24 hours.

Perth and the Peel region was plunged into a snap three down lockdown from midnight yesterday.

Those returning from the long weekend will be allowed back into the lockdown zone, however, of the 8000 travelling between border checkpoints almost 290 have been turned around.

The restrictions are set to lift by Tuesday, but Mr McGowan would said the next 24 hours were critical.

"Right now it's too early to predict what will happen come Tuesday" he said.

"We need to see more testing completed."

Mr McGowan said he would extend the lockdown if there was still a risk of the virus spreading locally.

"We just have to be cautious," he said.

"We're not going to make a move which will elevate the risk to the Western Australia public, our number one priority is to keep West Australians safe.

"So, we won't be opening up if we think there's any potential for further outbreak."

Mr McGowan said WA had 2156 returned travellers in hotel quarantine, but reiterated his comments the federal government needed to do more to assist with the program.

He said the high numbers of returned overseas travellers continues to put "strain and pressure" on our hotel quarantine system.

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"I asked the Commonwealth to halve our international arrivals for at least a month. This request has been accepted," he said.

"However, the reduction in our weekly cap will only begin from Thursday morning. The reduced cap of 512 per week will stay in place until May 30.

"However, if the Commonwealth is unable to assist with proper quarantine facilities, I am reluctant to return to the full 1025 per week cap.

"That weekly number of returning residents is not something that can continue long term without proper Commonwealth quarantine facilities being used. I'll discuss this further with the Prime Minister and my state and territory colleagues in coming days."

Mr McGowan set his targets on the Federal Government, saying calls for help with the hotel quarantine system have been ignored.

However, today, Defence Minister Peter Dutton said Mr McGowan agreed, along with other Australian premiers, to manage hotel quarantine, and knew the Mercure wasn't fit for purpose before outbreak.

"The facts are that the premiers agreed last year on medical advice to conduct the hotel quarantining in the way that they are doing," Mr Dutton told ABC's Insiders.

"If you're talking about tented facilities, which you would need – our airbases don't hold thousands of people. This has all been looked at by the premiers. Again, Mark McGowan has made a mistake with the Mercure Hotel.

"Nobody has been critical of him for that. He doesn't need to be defensive. He doesn't want to be the next Dan Andrews, where they had significant problems.

"They have got other hotels that are perfectly fit for purpose. WA had already identified that the Mercure wasn't fit for purpose and so they are moving away from that. I'm not critical of that, the reason has been learned."

Out-of-control Mustang smashes into Gold Coast boatyard

An out-of-control car has smashed into a Gold Coast boatyard, sparking a fireball and leaving a path of destruction costing tens of thousands of dollars.

Just before 1am on Sunday, the Mustang ploughed over a power box, through a fence and smashed into boats at the Biggera Waters boatyard before the vehicle burst into flames.

Police say the driver of the Mustang was overtaking another vehicle at high speed when he lost control of the muscle car.

The wreckage of a boat destroyed in the fire.

The driver walked away from the accident unscathed though was issued two fines, one for speeding and one for driving without due care.

The luxury car was left a charred mess.

"The car has struck a number of concrete bollards which could have rendered the driver unconscious," Queensland Police's Brendan Wiblen told 9News.

The charred remains of the Mustang.

"If he had been rendered unconscious and the fire had then started, he was in desperate trouble. We're just very fortunate today that nobody has been seriously injured."

9News understands the boatyard is facing a damage bill estimated to be in the tens of thousands of dollars.

Travel rethink after Perth's patient zero returned from Indian wedding

Disbelief is growing that patient zero in Perth's latest coronavirus outbreak is a man who returned from India after being given an exemption to travel there for a wedding.

Other Australians who've been refused travel exemptions say the system for granting them is nothing more than a lottery.

Perth emergency doctor Andrew Lowe has a simple wish: to marry his fiance Richa. The trouble is she's in India and their marriage visa hasn't been approved, a dilemma made worse by COVID-19.

READ MORE: WA records no new COVID-19 cases on second day of lockdown

The Mercure Hotel in Perth.

"Just to say everything's up in the air at the moment and I'm still trying to problem solve and try to figure out how I get to be with the person I love," Dr Lowe told 9News.

With Perth in its second day of a three-day lockdown, Andrew and Richa's situation is made more frustrating by the revelation that Perth's patient zero was granted an exemption to fly to India for a wedding, considered a super-spreader event in one of the world's worst COVID hotspots.

"The current process for travel exemptions at the moment is considered a bit of a lottery. So, what does get approved and doesn't get approved, nothing's surprising," Dr Lowe said.

Even if a marriage visa was approved, Richa is not considered immediate family, so would not get an exemption from the current travel ban.

This leaves Dr Lowe to consider packing up and moving to India to work as a doctor.

"No one's asking for anything dramatic. But we're just asking for more transparency for a clear plan forward from the government and to not be left in this permanent limbo," he said.

READ MORE: Family caught coronavirus from across hotel corridor in Perth

WA records no new local cases of COVID-19

WA Premier Mark McGowan has been scathing of the process that allowed that particular travel exemption, and of the government's refusal to provide alternative facilities for quarantine such as defence bases and the Christmas Island detention centre.

It drew a blunt response from Defence Minister Peter Dutton.

"Mark McGowan has made a mistake with the Mercure Hotel," Mr Dutton told the ABC's Insiders.

"Nobody's being critical of him for that. So he doesn't need to be defensive. He doesn't want to be the next (Victorian Premier) Dan Andrews, where they had significant problems."

Mr McGowan hit back.

"It's a bit rich of them now to blame us when we're doing their job," he said.

Defence Minister Peter Dutton.

Opposition leader Anthony Albanese was also on the attack.

"We really need the government to get its act together," Mr Albanese said.

There were no new cases in Western Australia today. Even so, from Thursday, Perth will only accept 512 returned travellers per week, a reduced cap that will stay in place until May 30.

From driveways to marches, veterans carry on Anzac spirit

As the sun rose across Australia, a hushed silence fell across the country.

Thousands stood side-by-side for Anzac Day, for the first time in two years, to watch the night sky turn to dawn, pausing and reflecting on the great sacrifice men and women before them have made.

"Our strength is found in each other," Prime Minister Scott Morrison told the crowd in Canberra, where a moving dawn service was held at the Australian War Memorial.

LIVE UPDATES: Australia marks Anzac Day

"This time last year like so many other times in our history, we faced a defining moment as a nation, a moment of uncertainty and danger, when the future seems so uncertain masked by fog," he said.

"We couldn't gather, indeed, but we held candles in our driveways and on balconies and we played the Last Post on phones and radios and some will do together.

"We discovered a deep truth about who we are. Our strength is found in each other."

In all capital cities and towns across the country, except for Perth which is under a snap lockdown, eased coronavirus restrictions meant large crowds could gather at cenotaphs and war memorials.

In Sydney, 1200 people attended the service at Martin Place.

RSL NSW President Ray James told Weekend Today Anzac Day is an important occasion to remember those who haven't returned home.

"I know myself and other individuals I talk to, you reflect in similar ways," Mr James said.

"You reflect on the people you served with, especially as a veteran and think of family members who never came home or family members still serving. It's very important.

"It makes you get goose bumps I suppose."

Around 10,000 then marched through the CBD for the official parade.

Attendees included 104-year-old WWII vet Alf Carpenter, who marched proudly down Elizabeth St.

World War 2 Vet 104 year Alf Carpenter marching down Elizabeth St Sydney on Anzac Day, 2021

In Coogee, in Sydney's eastern suburbs, thousands turned out for the dawn service and then parade along the popular stretch of coast.

Lifeguards stood with veterans to pay tribute to those who have fought for our freedom.

At Melbourne's Shine of Remembrance, 1400 people were allowed to attend.

A high metal fence was erected around the shine to keep people away.

Many were frustrated by the cap, particularly because crowd numbers have been boosted at the MCG for AFL games this weekend.

"Obviously we're younger veterans, but out of frustration and almost protest I came here because I refuse to get a ticket to allowing what, 75,000 people to go to football but I can't come here to mourn, pay my respects," veteran Brett Harrison told Weekend Today.

READ MORE: Perth wakes to second day of lockdown

'Light up the Dawn'

The Light up the Dawn campaign began last year during the COVID lockdown when services were cancelled amid the pandemic.

Rather than attending events, people were urged to light a candle and stand in their driveways to pay their respects.

Today, that tradition was continued across many cities and towns.

Perth, which is on the second day of its snap three-day lockdown, saw many take part in Light up the Dawn after official services were cancelled.

Brisbane also took part in the Light up the Dawn services, planting poppies and pay tribute to the fallen.

'China is militarising ports across our region'

Defence Minister Peter Dutton has issued a stern warning for Australians this Anzac Day, saying it's time the Defence Force turned its attention to nearer shores amid a growing threat from China.

Speaking to Weekend Today this morning, Mr Dutton paid tribute to the "amazing effort" of the tens of thousands of Australians and other Allied service personnel who had fought in the Middle East over the past two decades, saying they had saved Australia and other nations from terror attacks.

However, with the remaining 80 ADF personnel set to return from service in Afghanistan by September, Mr Dutton said that Australia must now focus on closer threats to its national security.

LIVE UPDATES: Anzac Day marches get underway amid COVID-19 restrictions

"We need to recognise that our region is changing," he said.

"China is militarising ports across our region. We need to deal with all of that, and that is exactly what we are now focused on."

The comments follow the contentious decision by Foreign Minister Marise Payne to scrap Victoria's controversial infrastructure agreement with Beijing linked to China's Belt and Road initiative.

The move prompted immediate backlash from the foreign superpower, with Chinese officials slamming it as an "unreasonable and provocative move taken by the Australian side against China".

READ MORE: 'Australia not targeting China' after Victorian trade deal scrapped

An aerial view of construction at Mabini (Johnson) Reef by China, in the disputed Spratley Islands, in the south China Sea.

"It further shows that the Australian government has no sincerity in improving China-Australia relations."

Tensions are also mounting in the South China Sea, where the Philippine government is demanding China remove a reef claimed by Manila.

The escalating feud between Manila and Beijing started after more than 200 Chinese vessels suspected by Philippine authorities to be operated by militias were spotted early last month at Whitsun Reef.

The United States has said it would stand by the Philippines amid the standoff.

READ MORE: Philippines summons Chinese ambassador over reef dispute

Chinese vessels are moored at Whitsun Reef, South China Sea.

Over the past year, China has slapped trade sanctions on a range of Australian exports, with billions of dollars wiped, after Australia called for an international investigation into the origins of the coronavirus pandemic and the Federal Government introduced foreign interference legislation.

The recently-installed defence minister's comments today will be taken as further indication of rising tensions, as the federal government refuses to back down.

Teenage girl rushed to hospital after NSW quad bike accident

A 15-year-old girl has been rushed to hospital with serious injuries after a quadbike accident north-west of Sydney.

Two ambulance teams and CareFlight treated the teen at the Upper Colo Reserve campsite, north of Windsor, around 12.40pm today after she became pinned underneath a 4WD buggy when it upturned.

After she was freed, CareFlight's specialist doctor and NSW Ambulance critical care paramedics performed a clinical assessment on the patient, including an ultrasound and administered pain relief.

Emergency services treat a teenager after a 4WD buggy crash.

She was taken to Westmead Children's Hospital in a serious but stable condition, with pelvis and arm crush injuries.

"The young patient suffered serious pelvic and arm injuries and was flown in the care of the Careflight specialist medical team to Westmead Children's Hospital," NSW Ambulance inspector Joe Ibrahm said.

CareFlight at the scene on a private property in Upper Colo.

"It's always confronting when treating a young patient but our paramedics did an excellent job in difficult circumstances.

"This is a timely reminder that circumstances can change quickly and we encourage those enjoying off-road activities to take all necessary safety precautions."

Victorian veterans frustrated by fence at Dawn Service

After months of uncertainty, Victorians were today allowed to pay their respects to diggers on Anzac Day, but COVID safe measures had some feeling disconnected.

A wire fence was set up along Melbourne's Shrine of Remembrance for the dawn service, blocking people from getting too close to the sacred area.

Just 1400 people were allowed into the dawn service, a stark contrast to the 85,000 allowed at the MCG for the traditional Anzac Day AFL match.

READ MORE: As it happened: Dawn services held across the country

"They're allowing 75,000 people to go to the football but I can't come here to mourn and pay my respects," veteran Brett Harrison told 9news.

Mr Harrison said the fence separating diggers from the Shrine felt like a betrayal.

IN PICTURES: Australians and New Zealanders gather for Anzac Day Dawn Services

"Those of us who have served are being turned away at the front gate … it's just completely disrespectful," he said.

The RSL is attempting to temper the anger, with RSL CEO Jamie Twidale praising service attendees for showing up despite the COVID-safe measures.

READ MORE: Coronavirus leaves Gallipoli dawn service deserted for a second year

"The fact they have come in and stood in the dark is really testament to the Australian spirit," Mr Twidale said.

But despite public services going ahead after months of doubt, many were still frustrated by the barriers in place.

"You're standing here paying tribute and respect to Australia, and for the men who gave their lives and for the freedom of Australia and this (the fence) doesn't represent freedom," one man said.